McLibel is the true story of a postman and a gardener who took on McDonald’s and wouldn’t say “McSorry,” in a legal battle since described as “the biggest corporate PR disaster in history.” McDonald’s loved using the UK’s libel laws to suppress criticism. Major media organizations like the BBC and The Sun had crumbled and apologized. But then McDonald’s sued penniless activists’ Helen Steel and Dave Morris. In what became the longest trial in English legal history, the “McLibel 2” represented themselves against McDonald’s USD$19 million legal team. Every aspect of the corporation’s business was cross-examined: from junk food and McJobs, to animal cruelty, environmental damage and the company’s advertising to children. Outside the courtroom, Dave brought up his young son alone and Helen supported herself working nights in a bar. McDonald’s tried every trick in the book against them. Legal maneuvers. A visit from Ronald McDonald. Top U.S.executives flying to London for secret settlement negotiations. Even spies. Seven years later, in February 2005, the marathon legal battle finally concluded in the European Court of Human Rights. And the result took everyone by surprise – especially the British Government. Filmed over ten years by no-budget Director Franny Armstrong (Drowned Out), McLibel features reenactments of key courtroom scenes directed by Ken Loach. McLibel is not about hamburgers. It is about the power multinational corporations wield over our everyday lives and two unlikely heroes who are changing McWorld.

Version 1 of a documentary about the recent Pittsburgh G20 Protests, and the Police Occupation of the University of Pittsburgh. This film is a collaboration between Pittsburgh Indymedia, Chicago Indymedia, Twin Cities Indymedia, and the Glass Bead Collective. Expect a future version with even more footage, and more analysis about the G20 and the Occupation of Pitt.

This movie shows the inspiring guerilla struggle of the Nepali people, against all odds, even in the face of US imperialism and Indian expansionism. In the face of all of this oppression and imperialism, the third poorest country in the world with extraordinarily backward fuedal relations that oppress women and indigenous peoples, is standing up from the ground and ripping all oppression from the very root of culture, economic, and social relations.

Preamble to the IWW Constitution
The Organizer
Little Red Hen
Which Side Are You On
The Two Bums
Banks of Marbles
Put it on the Ground
The Popular Wobbly
Song of the Rail
Hold the Fort
We Have Fed You All a Thousand Years
Ain’t Done Nothing if You Ain’t Been Called a Red
Hallelujah I’m a Bum
The Boss
The Preacher & the Slave
Mysteries of a Hobo’s Life
Stung Right
Joe Hill’s Last Will
Mr. Block
Power in the Union

A Cry from the Grave tells the story of the Srebrenica massacre of 1995, in which the Bosnian Serb army killed an estimated 7,000 Bosnian Muslims.

It follows hour by hour the story of the killings. Through the testimony of survivors and relatives of those who died it explores the pain felt when no one is brought to justice.There are interviews with investigators from the UN-sponsored court at The Hague and from the UN special prosecutor.

But the underlying message of the film is bleak indeed – no matter what is done, it will never be enough. A Cry from the Grave has won numerous prizes. It has been shown at the UN, and it was used during a war crimes trial at The Hague.